Rbr750
Monthly
Insufficient input validation across multiple NETGEAR Orbi mesh router models (RBR/RBS/RBE series) permits authenticated administrators on the local network to make unauthorized modifications to router software and functionality beyond their intended privilege scope. Affected are all firmware versions prior to V7.2.8.5 on most Orbi models and prior to V9.12.4.9 on the RBE97x series. No public exploit code exists and this vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog; NETGEAR self-reported and has released patched firmware addressing the flaw.
Stack-based buffer overflow in NETGEAR Orbi mesh router firmware (RBE, RBR, RBS series) enables authenticated administrators with local network access to submit malformed buffer input that bypasses validation and triggers unauthorized modification of router software and functionality. The attack surface is significantly constrained by the requirement for both administrative credentials (PR:H) and adjacent network positioning (AV:A), limiting realistic exposure to insider threats or scenarios where an attacker has already compromised admin credentials within the LAN. No public exploit identified at time of analysis, SSVC confirms exploitation status as none, and vendor-released patches are available across all affected model lines.
System integrity tampering across a broad portfolio of NETGEAR home and small-business networking devices allows authenticated administrators on the local network to manipulate device configuration beyond intended boundaries, classified under CWE-15 (External Control of System or Configuration Setting). The CVSS 4.0 vector (AV:A/PR:H/VI:H) confirms that exploitation is constrained to adjacent network access with high-privilege credentials, yet the integrity impact on the vulnerable system is rated High. No public exploit code exists (SSVC: Exploitation none; CVSS E:U), and NETGEAR has released firmware patches for all affected product lines.
Insufficient input validation across multiple NETGEAR Orbi mesh router models (RBR/RBS/RBE series) permits authenticated administrators on the local network to make unauthorized modifications to router software and functionality beyond their intended privilege scope. Affected are all firmware versions prior to V7.2.8.5 on most Orbi models and prior to V9.12.4.9 on the RBE97x series. No public exploit code exists and this vulnerability is not listed in the CISA KEV catalog; NETGEAR self-reported and has released patched firmware addressing the flaw.
Stack-based buffer overflow in NETGEAR Orbi mesh router firmware (RBE, RBR, RBS series) enables authenticated administrators with local network access to submit malformed buffer input that bypasses validation and triggers unauthorized modification of router software and functionality. The attack surface is significantly constrained by the requirement for both administrative credentials (PR:H) and adjacent network positioning (AV:A), limiting realistic exposure to insider threats or scenarios where an attacker has already compromised admin credentials within the LAN. No public exploit identified at time of analysis, SSVC confirms exploitation status as none, and vendor-released patches are available across all affected model lines.
System integrity tampering across a broad portfolio of NETGEAR home and small-business networking devices allows authenticated administrators on the local network to manipulate device configuration beyond intended boundaries, classified under CWE-15 (External Control of System or Configuration Setting). The CVSS 4.0 vector (AV:A/PR:H/VI:H) confirms that exploitation is constrained to adjacent network access with high-privilege credentials, yet the integrity impact on the vulnerable system is rated High. No public exploit code exists (SSVC: Exploitation none; CVSS E:U), and NETGEAR has released firmware patches for all affected product lines.